Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues
Universidade Feevale
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Publication
Featured researches published by Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues.
Journal of Venomous Animals and Toxins Including Tropical Diseases | 2011
Rg Tavares; Rodrigo Staggemeier; A.L.P. Borges; Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues; L.A. Castelan; J. Vasconcelos; M.E. Anschau; Silvia Maria Spalding
In parasitology, routine laboratory diagnosis involves conventional methods, such as optical microscopy, used for the morphological identification of parasites. Currently, molecular biology techniques are increasingly used to diagnose parasite structures in order to enhance the identification and characterization of parasites. The objective of the present study was to review the main current and new diagnostic techniques for confirmation of parasite infections, namely: polymerase chain reaction (PCR), real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP), Luminex xMAP, random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD), amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP), and restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), in addition to microsatellites. Molecular assays have comprehensively assisted in the diagnosis, treatment and epidemiological studies of parasitic diseases that affect people worldwide, helping to control parasitic disease mortality.
Mutation Research-genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis | 2008
Pamela Brambilla Bagatini; Roberta Passos Palazzo; Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues; Cynthia Hernandes Costa; Sharbel Weidner Maluf
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is associated with a high production of reactive oxygen species, which may cause oxidative DNA damage. High levels of genomic damage have been associated with renal failure and hemodialysis. However, no information is available in the literature concerning the levels of DNA damage in T2DM individuals who are dependent on hemodialysis. This study used the comet assay to assess the levels of DNA damage before, immediately after and 48 h after the hemodialysis session in 25 patients with T2DM and in a group of 20 healthy individuals, selected according to mean age, sex and smoking habit. Our results showed increased levels of DNA damage in hemodialysis-dependent T2DM individuals (12.36+/-8.04) when compared with healthy individuals (7.35+/-7.41) (p=0.014). Damage levels increased immediately after the hemodialysis session (19.76+/-12.40) (p=0.04), which suggests a possible action of pro-oxidative factors related to the therapy, with a genotoxic effect on cells. Results obtained 48 h after hemodialysis (6.44+/-5.99) evidenced damage removal (p=0.001), which may be suggestive of DNA repair.
The Scientific World Journal | 2013
Madalena Cristina Streb Scalon; Ciliana Rechenmacher; Anna Maria Siebel; Michele Luz Kayser; Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues; Sharbel Weidner Maluf; Marco Antônio Siqueira Rodrigues; Luciano Basso da Silva
The present study aimed to evaluate the physicochemical parameters and the genotoxic potential of water samples collected in the upper, middle, and lower courses of the Sinos River, southern Brazil. The comet assay was performed in the peripheral blood of fish Hyphessobrycon luetkenii exposed under laboratory conditions to water samples collected in summer and winter in three sampling sites of Sinos River. Water quality analysis demonstrated values above those described in Brazilian legislation in Parobé and Sapucaia do Sul sites, located in the middle and in the lower courses of the Sinos River, respectively. The Caraá site, located in the upper river reach, presented all the physicochemical parameters in accordance with the allowed limits in both sampling periods. Comet assay in fish revealed genotoxicity in water samples collected in the middle course site in summer and in the three sites in winter when compared to control group. Thus, the physicochemical parameters indicated that the water quality of the upper course complies with the limits set by the national guidelines, and the ecotoxicological assessment, however, indicated the presence of genotoxic agents. The present study highlights the importance of combining water physicochemical analysis and bioassays to river monitoring.
Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2013
Fernando Rosado Spilki; Roger Bordin da Luz; Rafael Bandeira Fabres; Mayra Cristina Soliman; Mariana Kluge; Juliane Deise Fleck; Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues; Juliana Comerlato; Alexander Cenci; Cristine Cerva; Maurício Gautério Dasso; Paulo Michel Roehe
Viral gastroenteritis and other waterborne diseases are a major concern for health in Brazil. A number of studies were conducted about the presence of viruses on water samples from Brazilian areas. However, the knowledge about the occurrence of viral contamination of drinking water sources in rural settings of the country is insufficient. On the present work, 15 samples from 5 dairy farms located at the municipality of Tenente Portela were collected and analysed for the presence of human adenoviruses (HAdV), as well as human enteroviruses (EV) and rotaviruses (RV). HAdV was present on 66.66% of the water samples, and have been found in all samples from artesian wells and springs, which are used as sources of drinking water for the individuals inhabiting those farms. EV and RV found only in one sample each. The detection rates of HAdV on the water from these dairy farms are alarming and point towards a situation of elevated environmental contamination by fecal microorganisms of human origin and poor basic sanitation conditions.
Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2015
Carlos Augusto do Nascimento; Rodrigo Staggemeier; E Bianchi; Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues; Rafael Bandeira Fabres; Mayra Cristina Soliman; M Bortoluzzi; Roger Bordin da Luz; Ls Heinzelmann; El Santos; Juliane Deise Fleck; Fernando Rosado Spilki
Unplanned use and occupation of the land without respecting its capacity of assimilation and environmental purification leads to the degradation of the environment and of water used for human consumption. Agricultural areas, industrial plants and urban centres developed without planning and the control of effluent discharges are the main causes of water pollution in river basins that receive all the liquid effluents produced in those places. Over the last decades, environmental management has become part of governmental agendas in search of solutions for the preservation of water quality and the restoration of already degraded resources. This study evaluated the conditions of the main watercourse of the Sinos River basin by monitoring the main physical, chemical and microbiological parameters described in the CONAMA Resolution no. 357/2005.The set of parameters evaluated at five catchment points of water human consumption revealed a river that has different characteristics in each reach, as the upper reach was class 1, whereas the middle and lower reaches of the basin were class 4. Monitoring pointed to households as the main sources of pollutants in those reaches, although metals used in the industrial production of the region were found in the samples analyzed.
Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2015
Gs Monteiro; Juliane Deise Fleck; Mariana Kluge; Nk Rech; Mayra Cristina Soliman; Rodrigo Staggemeier; Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues; Marcelo Pereira de Barros; Ls Heinzelmann; Fernando Rosado Spilki
The spread of enteric viruses of domestic animals and human beings to wild species can be facilitated by the resistance of these viruses on the environment and their ability to be transmitted by water and contaminated food. The health status of the populations of pampas foxes Lycalopex gymnocercus) and crab-eating foxes (Cerdocyon thous) is largely unknown and the landscapes occupied by these animals in southern Brazil have been threatened by human occupation and expansion of agriculture. In this work, the search of genomes of human and canine adenoviruses in feces from these wild carnivores was used to track the dissemination of domestic animals and human pathogens to the free-living populations in a wildlife reserve located in southern Brazil. This was performed by virus-specific differential real-time polymerase chain reactions (qPCR) on stool specimens, avoiding capture and additional stress to the animals. Genus-specific conventional reverse-transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) was complementarily performed aiming the detection of enteroviruses (EV) and rotaviruses (RV) on these same samples. HAdV genomes were found on 14 out of the 17 (82.35%) stool samples analysed, whereas CAV was found co-infecting 5 of these samples. RV genomes were detected on 7 of the 17 samples (41.18%) and all samples were negative for EV. The results point to the dispersion of HAdV and RV at a high rate to these species of South American wild carnivores, which can be an effect of growing anthropisation of the habitat of these animals.
Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2015
Bergamaschi B; Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues; Joseane Vanessa dos Santos da Silva; Mariana Kluge; Roger Bordin da Luz; Juliane Deise Fleck; E Bianchi; Luciano Basso da Silva; Fernando Rosado Spilki
It is well recognized that the classical biological and chemical markers of environmental pollution do not necessarily indicate the presence or absence of emerging threats to public health, such as waterborne viruses and genotoxicants. The purpose of this preliminary study was to evaluate the presence of material of enteroviruses (EV), rotavirus (RV) and adenovirus (AdV) and genotoxicity in water samples from points of routine monitoring of water quality in the main course of the Sinos River. The points are classified into different levels of pollution in accordance to the Brazilian federal regulations. Viral genomes from EV, AdV were detected in two of the 4 collection points regardless of the level of urbanisation of the surrounding areas. In contrast, genotoxicity was not observed in piava (Leporinus obtusidens) fingerlings cultivated on these same water samples. Results were compared with classical physical, chemical and microbiological parameters. There was no clear evidence of association between any of the classical markers and the presence of viral genomes in the water samples tested.
Food and Environmental Virology | 2013
Andréia Dalla Vecchia; Mariana Kluge; Joseane Vanessa dos Santos da Silva; Juliana Comerlato; Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues; Juliane Deise Fleck; Roger Bordin da Luz; Thais Fumaco Teixeira; Paulo Michel Roehe; Roberta Capalonga; Ana Beatriz Almeida de Oliveira; Fernando Rosado Spilki
Revista Gestão e Desenvolvimento | 2013
Fernando Uecker Haas; Fabiano André Trein; Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues
Revista Brasileira de Biociências | 2012
Roger Bordin da Luz; Mariana Kluge; Rafael Bandeira Fabres; Aline Pacheco; Thaís Fontana; Rodrigo Staggemeier; Manoela Tressoldi Rodrigues; Juliane Deise Fleck; Fernando Rosado Spilki